Monday, August 31, 2015

Chronic Illnesses...A Letter to the Healthy

I came across this letter on a blog today. The letter is called "An Open Letter to Healthy People from a Former Healthy Person". This letter puts a lot of feelings that go along with lupus and looking healthy. There are a lot of reasons we don't talk about our chronic illnesses and a stigma to looking healthy (even though you're not). This comes from the blog BeingCharis.com:
"Dear healthy people,
Let me tell you about becoming a “sickbody.” I have Ankylosing Spondylitis. Right, just don’t even try to pronounce that. We’ll stick with calling it A.S., yeah? Really all you need to know about it for this blog post is that it’s a chronic autoimmune disease. I’ll share a link at the end for you to read more about it. 

I am watching myself transform from a healthy, young, active, invincible woman to a sick, grumpy, defeated, disabled, immobile, needy person. I know what it’s like on both sides now – I’m on top of the fence. I’m at a tipping point and I know which way I’m tipping. What goes up must come down. My fence has a greener side, definitely, but the other side of the fence is perpetually somewhere I’ve already been and can never return. My fence is a prison wall and I have multiple life sentences. I’m not getting out of this alive. It’s all downhill from here, you better believe it. Happy birthday, here’s another pain pill. Ready for narcotics yet? What about steroids? How’s your infusion this month? Oops, those side effects really took about a week of functioning from you, let’s try a new drug before that last one leaves your system and hope for the best.  We’re playing the medication dart board: bull’s eye on that last drug cocktail!
I can see it now, I’m becoming that grumpy old woman with resting bitch face to hide the hideous pain. I’m becoming that woman everyone feels sorry for and others don’t know how to approach because she might explode.
How terrifying to become something we’re all afraid of.
I emit solid grunts and gasps of masked pain and now it’s happening startlingly unbeknownst to me in public spaces. It’s like a fart you don’t realize you let out in a crowded elevator. Who DID that horrendous thing? I’m sharing my vulnerability without choice, with people who do not know me, whose only duty is to hold or withhold judgment of this masked-pain crusader. I am a warrior in my own mirror, but society is not a mirror. In my own space I occupy, I am a saint, I am a god, I am constantly overcoming or succumbing. But to the crowds, the masses, the hoi polloi, I am a poor wretched soul who needs to suck it up and shut it up. People have cancer, for crying out loud, you don’t matter as much. Big brother is watching and you don’t look sick and you’re too young for disability, why don’t you leave that for the people who really deserve it. Suck it up and go find a job (you’ll be dead in ten years).


Many of us you see who are broken, you know us only in our current brokenness. But remember, many of us once were full of life, full of vigor and energy. Remember, many of us still recall the days we had full control and freedom with our bodies. We desired everything and still believed nothing could keep us from being professional soccer players, chefs, teachers, doctors, parents, ballerinas…
Remember when you see us that we once were like you, healthy and full. Remember that we still remember what we’ve lost. Remember we still have hopes and wishes and dreams, and they are no less important, no less meaningful, and no less worthy than yours.
We love. We dream. We hope. We fight. We need. We survive. We succeed and fail. We live. Love us.
We hide the pain because it’s stigmatized, but also because we want to hide from ourselves. These bodies, our bodies, get so heavy we just want them gone. We want to get away from our own prison walls that we did not choose. Our sentences are binding, prophetic, and soul-wrenching. We often wonder what crime we could have committed in our mother’s womb to invite lifelong pain and degeneration. Fairness is a big deal and we battle the meaning of fair with every breath. Why us?
Our tears bathe silent pillows when the world is sleeping. Our cries go unheard when we try to recount them in the cold, sterile, institutional exam rooms we visit too frequently. Home is a white paper covered cot with pokes and prods and needles to track the progression of our losses. Home is where the heart is – broken and beating frantically in our throats during the MRI results. Our second shifts (if we can work at all) are the lunch hours and after-hours we spend on hold with pharmacies, doctors, insurance companies, or waiting in long lines for urgent care or a new prescription that will take full weeks of our lives away from complicated and frightfully severe side effects.  Our vulnerabilities lie dormant until we stand, embarrassed and demoralized, in a crowded room to beg for some quiet because our head is spinning; or when we place ourselves in front of a congregation of people and ask someone to please drive us home right now because we’re sick, so sick.

We, the people, fight in elections for our own versions of political and social progress while we, the chronically ill, stage losing fights in our sleep for disease regression and a return to our traditional bodies. We want an end to this gut-wrenching, spine-aching, head-spinning, disabling gift of our precious sickbodies. The concept of “mind over matter” muddles with the unpredictable, calculated precision of autoimmune inflammation causing kyphosis and iritis and spasms and 28-years-old-turning-74-next-month. We are still alive but we grieve the loss of who we were before this weight of helplessness and disease was inserted into our chest, our brains, our backs, our hearts. We have been blessed with the curse of  witnessing and grieving our own symbolic deaths as we learn to be something or someone we never imagined we’d see in the mirror. We learn to see ourselves from the outside looking in (while desperately peeking outward) because we are strangers in these new bodies and we may never know how to inhabit their unpredictability. If the pain doesn’t take your body the side effects of the pain medication will.
We are not strong, we are not admirable, we are not role models because we woke up and chose to be.  We are strong, admirable role models because we have no choice but to fight for sanity and purpose every day of our lives, with every beat of our heart, with every step of our feet or our cane or our walker or our wheels. What we do is not commendable because our career dream as a third grader was to become a chronically ill warrior.  What we do is commendable because we do not give up the fight against what we did not choose to become. Because we have two choices: give up or fight.

Be with us. Remain with us. We were once leaders, friends, professionals. We did not change, our bodies did. We are leaders, friends, professionals. We are sickbodies, and we’re here until we’re gone.
Love us.
To learn more about Ankylosing Spondylitis, check out the Spondylitis Association of America website."

I wasn't even aware of this specific chronic illness, but I agree with a lot that she said. Looking healthy can be hard, especially when you're hiding so much pain within. Some days are good....some days are okay...and some days are bad. I've gotten where I hide what I can, even from my husband and children. They don't understand and they will look at you when you talk about how you hurt, but they won't understand or even empathize because they have no idea what it feels like or even how bad things must be for you to be vocal...they just hear noise...complaints....weakness.
It's easier to persevere when you have no other choice....who wouldn't push through. I used to think it made me strong, but I think anyone would be strong in my situation. I guess it just makes me human and frail, but in my fragility I have had to lean on God. So maybe this illness is a gift from God to mold me into the person He wants me to be in this life. I have days where I'm tired. Tired or being tired and tired of being....but then I have days where I see how much I have learned from my illness and wonder who I would have been without it? Certainly not better, or at least I don't think so.
Here's to my 47th infusion...and LIFE! At least I can appreciate it!

Friday, August 28, 2015

It's been too long!

Well, it has been forever since I've blogged. I have found myself trying to keep up with the pace of life. It's just too fast for me. The days are filled with thousands of things to do and I never seem to have enough time to do half of them. My daily "To-Do List" seems to roll over to the next day everyday. My body isn't normal. This is just a fact. I am trying to treat my body as a "healthy" body so that I can live a normal life. A job, two kids, PTO mom, volunteer, Service Club leader, a mentor, a wife that keeps the house clean and meals made, taking the kids to soccer games and gymnastics, birthday parties and social events....ITS TOO MUCH. I give up! I surrender. God has made me see that this is too much for me and its time to slow down.
How do you slow down? What does that really look like? Well, for me, I'm starting by taking a year off from teaching. I truly love teaching. It is my calling. It is my spiritual gift and the way I give back to the Lord. I love being in the classroom and I adore my babies that are in my class each year. But teaching isn't just a 40 hour a week job....it's so much overtime and there is always something to take home and work on, or research, or create. The truth is that my Lupus body just isn't what my body used to be! I have to surrender to that.
My older sister also got remarried this summer and her wedding weekend getaway was an amazing weekend for us all. I truly am excited for her and happy that she has found someone who is wonderfully kind, loving, and giving. Here's a picture from the night before the wedding (Me, Mom, & Britt). We stayed at Barnsley Gardens in GA and it was phenomenal....I would love to go back annually! This was a very welcome relaxation and I am always happy to get to see my entire family. 

School has also started back (without me as a teacher) and the kids are still at TCA. They are loving K & 2nd grade!
Here is Tip with his Kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Tracey. She is amazing!!! And he loves going to school!

 Here is Ella McCray with her teacher, Ms. Lauren. They are both excited about school and I can't wait to be a parent and volunteer this year!


 I have also started taking a supplement this summer. It's called EHT and it is amazing. It has given me SO much energy, I've even started running!!!! This is big! I don't run, much less walk with my bad joints, but this supplement has done wonders for my body. I also am sleeping better and my memory is back to normal!!!! Look into this if you have any of these same issues. See the link below.



Watch this video to see how EHT changes your brain to improve your memory! EHT..what is it and how does it work? This is an amazing supplement that was developed by scientist at Princeton and I LOVE it!!!

We also have been working on things around the house, like our chicken coop. We are going to try to get into the farm life a little more. We also traded our 5 horses for 1 that the kiddos can ride.

More to come.....


I leave today with this thought: